Detainee Reveals ISIS Plot to Assassinate Lebanon’s Jumblat

Lebanese leader MP Walid Jumblat. (Reuters)
Lebanese leader MP Walid Jumblat. (Reuters)
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Detainee Reveals ISIS Plot to Assassinate Lebanon’s Jumblat

Lebanese leader MP Walid Jumblat. (Reuters)
Lebanese leader MP Walid Jumblat. (Reuters)

A Palestinian detainee in Lebanon, held on terrorism charges, revealed that the ISIS terrorist group had plotted to assassinate Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat, as well as carry out a number of attacks in the country.

Imad Yassine told a court where he was standing trial that ISIS sought to storm with a car bomb Jumblat’s Mokhtara residence in Mount Lebanon or his home in Beirut. The leader would then be assassinated “because he is the smartest politician in Lebanon,” added the suspect.

The detainee said that creating sectarian strife and sparking civil war in Lebanon was the goal of the plot.

Yassine said that ISIS member Mohammed Kota informed him of the plot.

The group had even carried out surveillance against the target, but that was as far as the plan got before it was abandoned, he told the court.

He said that he opposed assassinating Jumblat because he had championed the Palestinian cause for decades.

Yassine, who is described as the ISIS leader in the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh in southern Lebanon, was arrested by Lebanese military intelligence in October 2016.

The arrest was made during a swift operation after authorities had received information that a series of terrorist attacks were going to be carried out in the country.

The suspect said that he and other ISIS members in the refugee camp had set a number of potential targets in Lebanon. They included the country’s infrastructure, especially tourist locations, such as the central commercial district in Downtown Beirut and Casino du Liban north of the capital.

They also plotted to target the Zahrani gas station, Jiyeh power plant, the main market in the southern city of Nabatiyeh and a restaurant in the coastal city of Jounieh.

Yassine explained that his role was to simply attend the ISIS meeting in order to set the pace and make sure that the plotters were not hasty in their actions.

The plotters included Mohammed al-Chechani, one of the most prominent ISIS members, and his aide Jamal al-Moubayed and Kota.

The detainee denied that he was the ISIS leader in Ain el-Hilweh, asking: “How can I be the leader and wander around the camp without any guards. I was even arrested while I was headed alone to the mosque.”

Earlier on Monday, State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Saqr Saqr charged Ali al-Hujairi, former municipal chief of the northeastern border town of Arsal, with belonging to an “armed terrorist group (al-Nusra Front).”

He was also charged with facilitating the infiltration of gunmen to take part in clashes against the Lebanese army in 2012, 2013 and 2014.

Hujairi was charged with kidnapping Lebanese and foreign nationals, handing them over to terrorist groups and releasing them in exchange for ransom.



UN Envoy Warns of Renewed Violence in Syria a Month into a Fragile Ceasefire

UN Special Envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen (AFP)
UN Special Envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen (AFP)
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UN Envoy Warns of Renewed Violence in Syria a Month into a Fragile Ceasefire

UN Special Envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen (AFP)
UN Special Envoy to Syria Geir Pedersen (AFP)

Syria’s transition remains “on a knife-edge” and violence could resume at any moment in the southern city of Sweida, which saw deadly clashes last month, the top UN envoy for Syria warned on Thursday.

Geir Pedersen told the UN Security Council that while violence in Sweida has largely subsided following a ceasefire, “the threat of renewed conflict is ever-present — as are the political centrifugal forces that threaten Syria’s sovereignty, unity, independence and territorial integrity.”

Syria is grappling with deep ethnic and religious divisions following the ouster of Syria’s President Bashar Assad in December, which brought an end to decades of Assad family rule. The transition has proven fragile, with renewed violence erupting in March along the coast and in July in Sweida, a city with a significant Druze population, highlighting the continued threat to peace after years of civil war.

Clashes erupted in Sweida on July 13 between the Druze and local Bedouin tribes, and government forces intervened nominally to restore order. Israel intervened in defense of the Druze, launching dozens of airstrikes on convoys of government fighters.

Pedersen said in a video briefing to the council that although the July 19 ceasefire agreement has largely held, “we are still seeing dangerous hostilities and skirmishes on the margins of Sweida. And violence could resume at any moment,.”

Pedersen expressed concern that “a month of relative military calm belies a worsening political climate, with escalatory and zero-sum rhetoric hardening among many.”

The UN envoy said there is an urgent need for security forces under the transitional government led by interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa to demonstrate that they are acting to protect all Syrians.

Pedersen called for major security sector reforms in Syria and the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of non-government forces.

He warned that international support for Syria “risks being squandered or misdirected” without a genuine political transition that lays the path for long-term stability, good governance, credible reforms and a firm commitment to the rule of law and justice.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher called the humanitarian situation in Syria “dire,” saying 16 million people across the country need humanitarian support.

He said aid workers need protection and safety, noting that humanitarian convoys came under fire this month. He said money for food and other assistance is desperately needed, pointing to the UN humanitarian appeal for $3.19 billion for 2025 being only 14% funded